Luckily Microsoft has gone ahead and printed out all the changes in detail on the site and while there is nothing that’s stop-the-presses, the details should satisfy those who need to know.

Update 8.0.10211.204

Messaging improvements. A great messaging experience is now even better. You can now add multiple recipients at the same time when you send a text message and automatically save unsent text messages as drafts. You can even edit received text messages before you forward them.

Text replies to incoming calls. Can't take a call? Now you can send a prewritten text reply to a caller directly from the call answer screen. It's a nice way to let people know that you're not ignoring them.

Internet Explorer improvements. You can now change your settings to prevent pictures from downloading automatically—an easy way to help keep data usage low. You can also delete selected sites from your browsing history and leave the rest intact.

Wi-Fi connectivity. Got a favorite Wi-Fi network? Windows Phone 8 will now prioritize Wi-Fi connections based on your connection history.

Other improvements. Includes many other improvements to Windows Phone.

For us, besides Nokia’s camera fixes, the always-on Wi-Fi seems to be the coolest. While these changes are not game changers, they certainly do add some nice pizzazz and finishing touches to Windows Phone 8.

How’s the update treating you? What’s your favorite new feature? Let us know in comments. (Thanks, jcutting, for the tip!)

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Well, putting it up to a light bulb and rebooting it a couple times seemed to help. Still a little squirrely though :( The autobrightness worked perfect before and I would like to keep it that way as manual bright is way too bright and of course a battery hog. I tried enabling disabling the new features but I guess I will just hope it evens out and works as before.

I think I figured it out. Jumped the gun as It seems to be working now that I took it into a dark room. Think it needed to calibrate between dim and bright conditions. Than God cuz it was irritating me to no end HaHa,....

If anyone knows why North America's Nokia customers get the update today, but the rest of the world is supposed to wait until next February, then please post it or make an article for the site. I'm sure this is of interest to hundreds of thousands of customers.

If we knew the exact reasons, we certainly would pass it on. Our only guess is that Nokia and Microsoft prioritized AT&T/Rogers (they're the same hardware, RM-820) versus the international version which is technically a different device (RM-821, I believe).

But let's be honest: what ever answer/reason we give, it won't making anyone happy, will it?

Not all enterprises are built the same. Some need VPN it is what it is not everybody can afford Sharepoint.
Bad news is WP doesn't have VPN support :(
Good news is WP should have it soon :)
Do you guys really think MS is going to allow RIM to gain enterprise marketshare with BB10? Probably not so expect a business like update in February which should hopefully include VPN! native Skype and Lync messaging and contact import.
I'm just guessing here but it makes sense.

UAG can publish other apps besides SharePoint and you can use it to publish internal resources. I don't understand all this hubub about VPN support when all the issue is how your network is set up. If you can't use your WP8 the way your infrastructure is set up, then fire your architect!

Indeed - what is BB server other than a proxy from your resources to another network so your users don't have to VPN in. Publishing resources via UAG is allowing the same sort of data access without having to send your data through a 3rd party, nor be tied to a particular type of device.

Yup, because everyone has a choice in the matter. My company has over 100,000 employees and uses VPN. It is completely irrelevant to me whether someone feels that there is a better solution. It's irrelevant if there is a better solution. I have to use VPN, and until Windows Phone 8 supports it I cannot move my team over.

I don't think he wants MS to support HIS vpn implementation, instead he wants the doors opened for the various offerings and options. UAG, VPN, or third party... most doors are closed to an enterprise at the moment.

I can understand that. As a consultant, the best solution is one that gets that job done according to business requirements. If an enterprise approached me with "We want to use WP8 but we need a VPN solution", my answer would be: UAG. Period. You can use Android, iPhone, WebOS, et al. If the requirements were such that they had to use a NON-MS solution, then OK...UAG won't work for you--and you can't use WP8. Now you've got a decision to make--which pill will you swallow?

If you have a WP8, you're not a boob...but you are if you can't figure out how to implement a VPN solution that allows WP8 access to internal resources....yes, Virginia WP8 DOES support VPN technology.

Stop being such a dbag if you really are a consultant and you speak to you customers in that way you must not be very successful. If you are an "enterprise consultant" it must be for some small to mid range companies most large enterprises do not contract that stuff out it is handled by their internal support organizations. These larger companies the one I'm sure alot of the folks asking for vpn support work for can not just change their infrastructure on a whim it takes pilots and testing. To tell some one they should implement uag or fire their architect is just plainly stupid. I love WP had one since launch but its still small and a rather large task to convince your corporate IT to change the way they do business just for you. That is why native vpn should have been checked off the list of included standards. Another comment was correct in supposing this is a good time for MS to take back mobile in enterprise but they have to do it with standards and upgrades to existing services. BB is so awesome for ent. Because of the server you buy and put behind your network to run everything securely. I know your going to say well then implement uag but that's just not the way to get in and dominate. Add in all the needed bits so that this device is a simple no brainer android and ios have to many hoops to jump through to give the same security BES does. MS is the only one with the infrastructure in place in most business to fill that need today. They just need to finish off the mobile product to work with what everyone already has vpn is just the start and a small piece of the larger picture.

Dbags are the people who resort to name calling. Check yourself. Been doing Inf Consulting a long time and I know of what I speak. If an enterprise requires WP8 and requires vpn, theres a solution. period.

First one was having many issues. They asked me to reset it back to factory. My backup didn't download the first time so I reset it a second time and it bricked.
Then the second one had a proximity issue turning the screen black without haveing the phone to my head. No way to end a call or any function at all but to talk and listen.
The third bricked after installing the update today.
I really like the Lumia 920 and was looking forward to trying out the camera after the update. I'm going to wait for the wife to get home, install the update on hers and if hers is fine, I will get another Lumia 920, if hers bricks, off to return BOTH and get iPhone 5's where all the apps are and maybe try WP9 or 10 if they get it right by then.

I had the exact same thing happen to my lumia 920. There was a gap between the top of the screen and the body of the phone and dust was obscuring the proximity sensor, causing the issue you described. Before I sent it the phone I decided to do a hard reset to wipe my information and the phone bricked . . . I am outside of my 14 day return window so the phone is currently in Texas undergoing repairs. Great experience so far.

I had the proximity issue on first replacement yellow 920 (the first yellow kept shutting down at random times). On my second replacement, I had to go with white because yellow was out of stock :( anyway, the proximity issue popped up again. I found a forum (sorry, can't find the link) where a guy said the comical solution was to blow into the earpiece to clear out the dust. turns out it works. wish I had known to try that when it happened with my yellow.

Buy HTC dude, Nokia is young in the smart phones industry....Nokia is not dealing with the 3310s anymore and it'll take some time before they master the touch sensitives, HTC on the other hand is a master and pioneer in the smart phone industry, so just replace these faulty lumias and get an HTC 8X......the best out there ;-)

What??? Ur crazy to say nokia don't know what they're doing.. Nokia has been in the smartphone market waaaaayyyy before apple and the gang.....your comments are baseless!!! There's always gonna be faulty product,when it first come out... On the other hand HTC gotten better...

Dude u missed my point. I didn't say Nokia was young in the market, nokia has been with is for ages but they weren't manufacturing touch sensitive smartphone then, they were into those hard labor phones like the 3310, 3260, 3320 etc, these phones were just for messages and calls, they weren't smartphones. Nokia just started with touch sensitive smartphones with the Meego OS I guess which is just recent. You can check my facts on wikipedia if u doubt me. On the other hand, HTCs first phone was a touch sensitive phone and has been in it till now so I always say they know what they are doing way better than Nokia....Nokia is just a new kid on the block, it needs more time. Finally you can't say this is just a faulty lumia, coz that's his 3rd replacement..if the problem was with one phone, the 2nd replacement wouldn't have had the same problem. The fault is from a lot of lumias probably a whole batch which I'm saying it's as a result of nokia being new in touch sensitive smartphones (im no saying phones in general...but touch sensitive smartphones)

HTC did come out with a touchscreen phone in 2002, but Nokia did release a touchscreen phone in 2004. So really, Nokia is not a newcomer to touch screen technology. Is two years really that large of a lead? Is 8 years not enough to be considered a veteran in touchscreen tech?

In any case, who did what first is a moot point. Does HTC have a screen that can be used with gloves on? I don't think so, not without special gloves. Does HTC have a screen that you can use your keys as a stylus? It's possible, but I don't think so.

Clearly, Nokia knows how to do touchscreens better than HTC, otherwise, why wouldn't they have included the feature as well? I don't think it's just a novelty.

Nokia is hardly the new kid on the block. Hardware is hardware, and Nokia knows hardware, end of story. The only thing that makes a smartphone a 'smartphone' is the OS.

Seem you need a facts check. Nokia started touch screens with Symbian not meego. Check out the Nokia 5800 that came out in 2008.
And note they developed touch handsets back in 2003 with the never released Nokia 7700.
The point here is that Nokia have had some manufacturing issues not inexperience.

Seems like you need a facts check sir, the whoel Nokia N series was smartphone, i had the n8 before my 920 and even though it was symbian, touch screen worked great. In fact i've still been using my n8 as a music player, unfortunately WP8 blows as a music player... can't resume like other music players out there after pausing, not to mention the damn reboots.... But that's more of a software compatibility problem as i see it, microsoft should address those problems imediately as they are providing the damn thing (imho)

I'm with Kenzibit. I have a HTC that is 7 years old now and it's still working smoothly. All my phones are from HTC, Diamond, Touch Pro, HD2, HD7, Titan, One X, Titan II and now with the 8x.
Of course I distributed those phones to my family members hahahaha

Are you serious!!!!
Nokia is young in the smart phones industry and... it'll take time before they master the touch sensitive. Wake up buddy, Nokia's build quality and engineering is far superior AND HTC have a wide range of smartphones that almost look identical. They have used the same design for at least 5 years and their support for Windows Phone almost died two years ago. If it weren't for Nokia and their quality smartphones, then we would have to rely on HTC who almost abondoned WP.
The 8X is a good phone but definitely NOT the best out there

My last phone was the HTC Incredible on Verizon...I had major memory issues for two years that they could never resolve. I much prefer my Lumia 920...near flawless performance so far. I would not go back to HTC.

Nah, I bought HTC for my last two phones (Titan, Titan II) and I won't buy them again. Their product support is a sad, pathetic joke--the Titans are STILL waiting for the Tango update. Same is true for Samsung. Nice phones, awful support.
I'm very happy with my 920, and I won't be switching to HTC again any time soon.

I used the instructions given by wpcentral in one of their articles on how to fix bricked Lumia 920. There are two downloads. One was navifirm and the other was Nokia suite. All you need is Nokia suite and just follow the instructions. Nokia suite will do everything. Just plug your bricked phone in PC. Everything worked flawless after flashed my phone. Got all updates. By the way I bought mine off WalMart. No way I'm gonna be shipping it back and waiting another 2-3 weeks.

Unplug your phone, do a hard reset (vol down, power, camera at the same time), hold down the volume down key for 5 seconds, then plug in the charger. An exclamation point will show on the screen, then press vol up, vol down, power, vol down. Then leave the phone plugged in for 20 minutes or so. This should bring your phone back to life. It is what worked for me to thanks to nokia chat support. You will lose your settings but it is worth it. Good luck!